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Arsenic burden from cooked rice in the populations of arsenic affected and nonaffected areas and Kolkata city in west-Bengal, India

Pal, A; Chowdhury, U; Mondal, D; Das, B; Nayak, B; Chakraborti, D

Authors

A Pal

U Chowdhury

D Mondal

B Das

B Nayak

D Chakraborti



Abstract

Arsenic contamination of rice irrigated with contaminated groundwater contributes to the additional arsenic burden of the population where rice is the staple food. In an arsenic contaminated area, an experimental field-based study done on nine fields elucidated significant positive correlation between arsenic in irrigation water and soil, irrigation water and rice, and also soil and rice both for Boro (groundwater) and Aman (rainwater) rice. Speciation studies showed that for both Boro (cooked) and Aman (raw) rice from contaminated area, 90% of total recovered arsenic was inorganic. In arsenic contaminated, uncontaminated villages, and Kolkata city, daily quantities of arsenic ingested by adult population from cooked rice diet are equivalent to 6.5, 1.8, and 2.3 L, respectively, of drinking water containing WHO guideline value. In contaminated area, daily intake only from cooked Boro rice for 34.6% of the samples exceeded the WHO recommended MTDI value (2 mu g In-As day(-1) kg(-1) body wt), whereas daily intake from Aman rice was below MTDI value as was rice from uncontaminated areas and Kolkata city. Our study indicated that employing traditional rice cooking method as followed in Bengal delta and using water having arsenic <3 mu g L(-1) for cooking, actual exposure to arsenic from rice would be much less.

Citation

Pal, A., Chowdhury, U., Mondal, D., Das, B., Nayak, B., & Chakraborti, D. (2009). Arsenic burden from cooked rice in the populations of arsenic affected and nonaffected areas and Kolkata city in west-Bengal, India. https://doi.org/10.1021/es803414j

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date May 1, 2009
Deposit Date Mar 7, 2013
Journal Environmental Science & Technology
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 43
Issue 9
Pages 3349-3355
DOI https://doi.org/10.1021/es803414j
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es803414j
Related Public URLs http://pubs.acs.org/journal/esthag
Additional Information Funders : Indian Council of Medical Research, New Delhi, India